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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> South Kesteven District Council v Digital Pipeline Ltd [2016] EWHC 101 (Admin) (27 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/101.html Cite as: [2016] 1 WLR 2971, [2016] RA 113, [2016] WLR 2971, [2016] WLR(D) 58, [2016] EWHC 101 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
ON APPEAL FROM GRANTHAM MAGISTRATES' COURT
DEPUTY DISTRICT JUDGE NOBLE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE NICOL
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SOUTH KESTEVEN DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DIGITAL PIPELINE LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Ms JENNY WIGLEY (instructed by Cripps LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
INTRODUCTION
The relevant facts
1. The premises were leased to the Defendant from 22 June 2012 until 10th June 2014 by a Meanwhile Use lease on a peppercorn rent. The premises comprise a large retail warehouse with a supported storage floor or mezzanine. The valuation agency list entry, according to which rates are charged, gives the floor area for the ground floor as 1395.10 m2 and the mezzanine as 226.91 m2.
2. The Defendant is a bona fide registered charity. The charity's aim is to collect unwanted IT equipment from donors in the UK, process it and transport it to Africa with a view to providing access to functioning IT equipment to those who would not otherwise have access to computers in schools. To achieve this aim the Defendant holds quarterly public access appeals at various locations in the UK.
3. It is agreed that the Defendant has held public access appeals at the premises on 10 separate 2 day periods between June 2012 and June 2014.
4. These appeals were well planned and advertised in advance through adverts in local newspapers and press releases. Letters were sent to local councillors, local schools, local businesses and libraries.
5. On appeal days 2 employees of the Defendant attend the premises and set up according to a standardised pattern. The set up consists of (1) a board outside the premises (2) around 50 boards detailing facts on African countries (3) a small number of boards seeking financial sponsorship (4) a gazebo containing adverts for sponsorship (5) (a gazebo containing projection equipment (6) a replica or mock up of a classroom in a container.
6. In addition large flags representing each of the 53 African countries were suspended from the ceiling. These were hung from 26 June 2012 to 20 June 2014. They remained in situ between each appeal day.
7. Also present outside the premises was a sign affixed to the Premises advertising the Defendant although it disintegrated throughout the period of the lease.
8. The Defendant on the 'Appeal Days' used approximately 42% of the available space in the premises.
9. Other than the Defendant there was no other occupation or use of the premises on the appeal days."
"Were the premises used "wholly or mainly for charitable purposes on the appeal days?
18. In arriving at my judgment on this issue I looked at the evidence presented by both parties and weighed up the evidence using a broad approach as suggested by the court in Sheffield City Council v Kenya Aid Programme [2013] EWHC 54 (Admin); [2014] Q.B.62.
19. I therefore took into consideration that:
a. the display by the Defendant on the appeal days uses less than 50% of the available space;
b. when Mr Johnson of the Council visited the appeals on 4 separate occasions for 30 minutes he was the only visitor; and
c. some of the stands encouraged visitors to sponsor the charity's projects.
20. I have not taken into account that possibly more suitable premises could have been found by the Defendant.
21. On behalf of the charity I have taken into account that:
a. the appeal days raised a total of 640 pieces of equipment (which the Defendant says was a success);
b. the Council visited the site for only a fraction of the time the premises were open;
c. whilst there were quiet periods, at times there was a steady flow of visitors;
d. there was no direct fund raising on the site, i.e. no collection boxes, no taking of sponsors' names; and
e. the Defendant accepted that the premises were not ideal, but 'beggars can't be choosers'.
22. I also noted that whilst less than 50% was used, nothing else happened in the remainder. It was not a case where 40% was used by the charity and the remainder or a significant proportion was used by a commercial organisation. On appeal days the only thing happening was the appeals.
23. Weighing all those factors up, and taking into account the fact that nothing else at all was happening at the premises, i.e. the other 50+% of the premises were empty, I was of the view that the premises were being used mainly for charitable purposes.
24. Therefore I found for the Defendant and dismissed the Council's application."
"The question for the opinion of the High Court is:
Whether on the facts found about the amount and nature of the use of the hereditament [i.e. premises] I was correct to decide that the hereditament was "wholly or mainly used for charitable purposes" pursuant to s43(6) of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 on appeal days?"
The relevant law
" 'Wholly' in section 4(2)(a) is not synonymous with 'solely'. The notion that an office building which is unused for any purpose throughout seven of its eight floors is 'wholly used' for the purpose for which the one floor is actually in use does not accord with common sense."
"The natural reading and meaning of the words used are, in my judgment, apt to cover not only consideration of the purpose of the use, but also the extent or amount of the actual use. It follows therefore that I would hold that the Judge was right to take account of and place weight upon the extent to which the premises were used."
"It is reasonable to infer that Parliament intended that the substantial mandatory exemption from rates for a charity in occupation of a building should depend upon the charity actually making extensive use of the premises for charitable purposes (i.e. use of the building which is substantially and in real terms for the public benefit, so as to justify exemption from ordinary tax in the form of non domestic rates), rather than leaving them mainly unused."
The arguments before the court
"should depend upon the charity actually making extensive use of the premises for charitable purposes … rather than leaving them mainly unused" (emphasis added)
"A building may fairly and properly be described as being wholly used for a particular purpose even though not every square metre of floor space is in constant use all the time. For instance, the whole of a room used as an office can be described as being wholly used as an office, even though it is spacious and not crammed with people working. I also think it can fairly be described as being wholly used as an office, albeit it is closed and left vacant during the night." (PSCT, [37])
Discussion
Mr. Justice Nicol: